I found the following article about fossilization written by an evolutionists.
Look at the following paragraph:
"We cannot expect that all or even most of the organisms that have lived on Earth will be represented in the fossil record. On the contrary, only a few, living in favoured environments and possessing hard parts, will have any likelihood of being preserved (a large number of known phyla have no members which possess hard parts, and most phyla have members which possess no hard parts). On top of this, the vast majority of fossils have not been discovered since they have either eroded away previously or remain buried and out of reach. So the fossil record is not a comprehensive record of all life that has existed on Earth. Nor is the rock record a comprehensive record of all environments that have existed. Further, with regard to transitional fossils, is has become apparent in recent years that evolution does not necessarily proceed in a constant, gradual manner over geological time, but can operate rapidly, in isolated populations. Such evolution results in small populations of intermediates separated by very short periods of geological time. such scenarios are unlikely to make it into the fossil record to begin with, let alone survive to be found. Thus preservation of any fossil from a transitional series will be rare."
Isn't this "cheating"? How can evolutionists say that the fossil record supports evolution 100%, and at the same time say "Oh but because of the nature of fossilization, most lifeforms won't be represented and most evolutionary jumps won't be found."?
Also the fossil record seems to contradict the last statement. If fossilization is so rare under normal circumstances, then how come we have found such an extensive fossil record? Would this not indicate that the fossil record is not the result of normal circumstances, but the result of a global (since we found extensive fossils all over the world) and catastrophic event, like a global cataclysm?
Look at the following paragraph:
"We cannot expect that all or even most of the organisms that have lived on Earth will be represented in the fossil record. On the contrary, only a few, living in favoured environments and possessing hard parts, will have any likelihood of being preserved (a large number of known phyla have no members which possess hard parts, and most phyla have members which possess no hard parts). On top of this, the vast majority of fossils have not been discovered since they have either eroded away previously or remain buried and out of reach. So the fossil record is not a comprehensive record of all life that has existed on Earth. Nor is the rock record a comprehensive record of all environments that have existed. Further, with regard to transitional fossils, is has become apparent in recent years that evolution does not necessarily proceed in a constant, gradual manner over geological time, but can operate rapidly, in isolated populations. Such evolution results in small populations of intermediates separated by very short periods of geological time. such scenarios are unlikely to make it into the fossil record to begin with, let alone survive to be found. Thus preservation of any fossil from a transitional series will be rare."
Isn't this "cheating"? How can evolutionists say that the fossil record supports evolution 100%, and at the same time say "Oh but because of the nature of fossilization, most lifeforms won't be represented and most evolutionary jumps won't be found."?
Also the fossil record seems to contradict the last statement. If fossilization is so rare under normal circumstances, then how come we have found such an extensive fossil record? Would this not indicate that the fossil record is not the result of normal circumstances, but the result of a global (since we found extensive fossils all over the world) and catastrophic event, like a global cataclysm?

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